Person | Common Orgs |
---|---|
Douglas Murray | Spectator |
Fraser Nelson | Spectator |
Dominic Cummings | Spectator |
Mary Elizabeth Lalage Wakefield (born 12 April 1975)[1][2] is a British journalist, and a columnist and commissioning editor for The Spectator. Contents 1 Early life 2 Family provenance 3 Career 4 Personal life 4.1 COVID-19 5 References 6 External links Early life Wakefield is the daughter of Katherine Mary Alice (née Baring) and Sir Humphry Wakefield, of Chillingham Castle in Northumberland.[3] She has two brothers; Captain Maximilian Wakefield (born 1967), an entrepreneur and racing car driver,[4][1] and Jack Wakefield (born 1977), former director of the Firtash Foundation and an art critic who writes for The Spectator and other publications.[5][6] A third brother, William Wakefield, was born in 1975 and died in infancy.[4] Wakefield was educated at the independent girls' boarding school Wycombe Abbey before studying at the University of Edinburgh and obtaining an undergraduate degree. Family provenance Through her mother, she is descended from Evelyn Baring, 1st Baron Howick of Glendale, the Governor of Kenya during the Mau Mau uprising, and Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey, a Governor General of Canada, and through the latter, Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey, of the House of Grey, a former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, after whom Earl Grey tea is named.[1] The vast Baring family fortune was made partly from the slave trade. Members of the Baring family received compensation for lost income due to slaves' emancipation under the Slave Compensation Act 1837 (Alexander Baring, a great x 4 uncle, received £9,900,[7] £1.3m when adjusted for inflation in 2019). The loan taken out by the government to pay for this compensation was fully paid off only in 2015.[8] Career Wakefield has worked at the weekly magazine The Spectator for decades, since Boris Johnson was editor, and is now commissioning editor,[3] assistant editor from 2001[9] and then deputy editor.[10] She also writes for the magazine as a columnist,[11] and has written for The Sun, Daily Mail, The Telegraph and The Times.[12] In 2015, following an online petition, Wakefield was forced to apologise and amend an article she had written for The Spectator in which she described an 18-year-old who had recently died in a moped crash as a "thuggish white lad".[13] Her father's Chillingham Castle website refers to her as "Daughter Mary, a musician and painter, [who] is also Assistant Editor of The Spectator".[14] Personal life In December 2011, Wakefield married Dominic Cummings, a friend of her brother Jack Wakefield.[15] In 2016, they had a son,[16][17] Alexander Cedd, named after an Anglo-Saxon saint.[15] She is a convert to Catholicism,[18] having been raised in the Anglican tradition.[19] Wakefield was portrayed by Liz White in the 2019 Channel 4 drama Brexit: The Uncivil War.[20] Wakefield is second cousin once removed to Alexander Armstrong; they share a direct ancestor in the person of colonial administrator Sir John Perronet Thompson.[21][22][23]
Person | Common Orgs |
---|---|
Douglas Murray | Spectator |
Fraser Nelson | Spectator |
Dominic Cummings | Spectator |